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The Psychopath Factory
- How Capitalism Organises Empathy
- Narrated by: Barnaby Edwards
- Length: 5 hrs and 13 mins
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Summary
Psychopaths seem to be everywhere. They are on the news and at the movies. People who lack empathy, be they ruthless entrepreneurs or crazed spree killers, are frequently labelled psychopathic; the charming socialiser is just as suspect as the awkward antisocial loner. The conception of what defines a psychopath seems to be a morass of contradictions, the only consistency being the supposition of a lack of empathy.
The Psychopath Factory: How Capitalism Organises Empathy examines how the requirements, stimuli, affects and environments of work condition our empathy. In some cases work calls for no-empathy characters who don't blink or flinch in the face of danger or crack under pressure. In other cases capitalism requires empathy in spades - charming, friendly, sensitive and listening managers, customer service agents and careers.
When workers are required to either ignore their empathy to do a job or dial it up to increase productivity, they are entering a psychopathic modality. The affective blitz of work, flickering screens, emotive content, vibrating alerts and sounding alarms erode our sensitivities whilst we are modulated with attention stimulants, social lubricants and so called antianxiety drugs. This is amidst a virulent and exacerbating climate of competition and frenzied quantification.
Capitalism pressures us to feign empathy and leverage social relationships on one hand whilst being cold and pragmatic on the other. We are passionate and enthusiastic whilst keeping a professional distance.
Sympathy, care, compassion and altruism are important; The Psychopath Factory: How Capitalism Organises Empathy argues that it is a mistake to presuppose that empathy can achieve these. Rather than being subject to the late capitalist organisation of our empathy, psychopathy could be a means of escape.
What listeners say about The Psychopath Factory
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- Robert James
- 13-09-21
interesting but ruined by ableism
chapters 1-7 are well argued,original, and interesting. The claim if these chapters is that capitalism treats empathic energy as a resource to be mined, that this is harmful for us, and that acknowledging this is important for understanding how capitalism works.
Chapter 8 onward is based on the deeply ableist, reactionary, and anti-scientific notion that autism is caused by watching too much TV. The author uses this dubious claim as the basis to suggest that the sensory stimuli of late capitalism somehow causes a lack of empathy across the population. This ruined the book for me, but I'd still say that chapters 1-7 are worth listening to.
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